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Biogas in the Energy Sector. Peter Taglia State Energy Program Wisconsin State Energy Office Plenary Session D: Bioenergy Green Energy Summit, March 7, 2012. www.energyindependence.wi.gov. Overview. What is Biogas? Anaerobic Digesters 101 Diverse Feedstocks
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Biogas in the Energy Sector Peter Taglia State Energy Program Wisconsin State Energy Office Plenary Session D: Bioenergy Green Energy Summit, March 7, 2012 www.energyindependence.wi.gov
Overview • What is Biogas? • Anaerobic Digesters 101 • Diverse Feedstocks • Diverse Energy Applications www.energyindependence.wi.gov
What is Biogas? • 65% methane • Produced by natural bacteria which consume organic material in oxygen –free environments Anaerobic Digesters: Airtight containers providing an environment for bacteria to consume organic material in the absence of oxygen Covered lagoon (example below), in-ground or aboveground vessels Source: Sergey Zimov in USEPA Methane and Nitrous Oxide from Natural Sources Source: USEPA AgSTAR www.energyindependence.wi.gov
Anaerobic Digesters in Wisconsin Designs Vary Widely • Size • Mixing • Temperature • Engineering and Customization to Match Specific Feedstocks Source: Focus on Energy www.energyindependence.wi.gov
Anaerobic Digesters in Wisconsin • 25+ Agriculture Systems • Mostly dairy manure • Crop wastes, spoiled feed • Potential energy crops (e.g., silage) • 28+ Industrial/Food Processing Systems • Cheese and brewery waste • Vegetable/meat processing • Paper production wastewater • 60+ Municipal Wastewater Systems • Solid Waste (e.g., landfills with methane recovery systems) www.energyindependence.wi.gov
Biogas Energy: Versatile • Heat • Use on-farm/in-plant • Nearby facilities such as greenhouses, industrial space heating • Electricity • Competitive, scalable • Baseload renewable power • Cogeneration (electricity + heat) • Vehicle Fuel • Renewable Natural Gas www.energyindependence.wi.gov
Biogas Energy: Scalable, Affordable BIOGAS 0.5 to 2 MW Plant Output: 50 MW 100+ M W 162 MW 5-50 MW 540 MW 1,300 MW 2,200 MW 150 MW • Sources: • PSC Docket 6630-CE-305 Exhibit 13.3 (Generic Wind, Glacier Hills, Biomass Co-Fire, 10/2010) http://psc.wi.gov/apps35/ERF_view/viewdoc.aspx?docid=140444 • EIA Energy Outlook 2011 (New Natural Gas, New Coal, New Nuclear, New Solar PV, 4/2011) http://www.eia.gov/forecasts/aeo/electricity_generation.cfm • Note: We/Domtar Biomass cost based comments by Commissioner Callisto on revised capital cost division of 5/2011 (original estimate from Exhibit 13.3 was 12.3). Not all assumptions in the calculations of levelized costs between the PSC and EIA are identical. One MW of baseload power can meet the electrical needs of approximately 1,000 typical homes. www.energyindependence.wi.gov
Wisconsin’s Biogas Advantage Feedstocks • #1 Cheese State • Large dairy, food processing and forestry industries, #1 in paper output Support Infrastructure • Top manufacturing state • Major hub of water research and industry • Many agricultural coops, aggregators Energy Security • WI has no fossil fuels • Currently spends ~$18 Billion on energy imports Cheese and Meat Packing are Major Wisconsin Industries (and identities) and Excellent Applications for Biogas Energy Production www.energyindependence.wi.gov
Wisconsin’s Biogas Investments SEO’s Mission is to invest in Wisconsin by: • Increasing energy efficiency • Developing renewable and alternative energy sources • Promoting energy-related economic development and jobs, and • Reducing reliance on imported oil. Manages over $85 million in federal energy related grants and loans including: • Biogas at a goat cheese plant in Belmont WI • Small farm biogas digester program • Biogas compressed natural gas vehicle fueling stations in Janesville and Dane County www.energyindependence.wi.gov
Thank You www.energyindependence.wi.gov